トームさんのインスタグラム写真 - (トームInstagram)「Tome's White Shirt Project Creates Beautiful Clothes for a Great Cause  ALESSANDRA CODINHA June 11, 2014 1:30 PM .  Sometimes the best thing to do during a busy fashion week/month—even one as occasionally rudderless as resort—is to take a step back and get some perspective. On Tuesday night, Tome’s Ryan Lobo and Ramon Martin aided in creating a space for exactly that. By way of introduction to the line’s first-ever resort collection and simultaneous charitable initiative, the White Shirt Project, Carolyn Murphy, Ajak Deng, various Vogue editors and other sylphs circulated through **Katie Ford’**s expansive SoHo loft in breezy pencil dresses in pure white and a swirling, baroque leaf-print jumpsuit, full skirts and button-front, slit-back blouses, wide-legged pants with thick obi-style belts and of course, the ever-present white shirt. .  “It’s really meant to be a universal garment,” Lobo said of the soft, sheer, straight white cotton shirt, admiring the differing takes of Yasmin Sewell, China Chow, Jessica Hart and various Vogue editors, who wore it closed at the Mandarin collar or left open-necked, wide cuffs left loose or rolled. “I just really love seeing all these different incredible women wearing it and making it their own.” (Andreja Pejić wore the top with aplomb, showing an expansive stretch of enviable leg courtesy of the drape-front white mini she paired with it.) All proceeds from the sale of the shirt will be donated to Ford’s foundation Freedom for All. “I think there is at this point not one country in the world that has not had cases of slavery reported,” Ford noted, adding that at present, more 27 million people are estimated to be enslaved across the world today. Freedom For All focuses on support groups in Brazil, Ghana, India, the Philippines, and the United States. “I chose those groups because they’re creating systematic solutions that can be replicated,” Ford said and the designers noted that the project itself—the universal, endlessly variable and imminently covetable white shirts— are symbolic of a “clean slate, and a fresh start” for the victims of human trafficking. It’s a whole new take on dressing for success」10月13日 4時57分 - tomenyc

トームのインスタグラム(tomenyc) - 10月13日 04時57分


Tome's White Shirt Project Creates Beautiful Clothes for a Great Cause

ALESSANDRA CODINHA
June 11, 2014 1:30 PM
.

Sometimes the best thing to do during a busy fashion week/month—even one as occasionally rudderless as resort—is to take a step back and get some perspective. On Tuesday night, Tome’s Ryan Lobo and Ramon Martin aided in creating a space for exactly that. By way of introduction to the line’s first-ever resort collection and simultaneous charitable initiative, the White Shirt Project, Carolyn Murphy, Ajak Deng, various Vogue editors and other sylphs circulated through **Katie Ford’**s expansive SoHo loft in breezy pencil dresses in pure white and a swirling, baroque leaf-print jumpsuit, full skirts and button-front, slit-back blouses, wide-legged pants with thick obi-style belts and of course, the ever-present white shirt.
.

“It’s really meant to be a universal garment,” Lobo said of the soft, sheer, straight white cotton shirt, admiring the differing takes of Yasmin Sewell, China Chow, Jessica Hart and various Vogue editors, who wore it closed at the Mandarin collar or left open-necked, wide cuffs left loose or rolled. “I just really love seeing all these different incredible women wearing it and making it their own.” (Andreja Pejić wore the top with aplomb, showing an expansive stretch of enviable leg courtesy of the drape-front white mini she paired with it.) All proceeds from the sale of the shirt will be donated to Ford’s foundation Freedom for All. “I think there is at this point not one country in the world that has not had cases of slavery reported,” Ford noted, adding that at present, more 27 million people are estimated to be enslaved across the world today. Freedom For All focuses on support groups in Brazil, Ghana, India, the Philippines, and the United States. “I chose those groups because they’re creating systematic solutions that can be replicated,” Ford said and the designers noted that the project itself—the universal, endlessly variable and imminently covetable white shirts— are symbolic of a “clean slate, and a fresh start” for the victims of human trafficking. It’s a whole new take on dressing for success


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